Renée Sintenis
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Renée Sintenis | |
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Born | Renate Alice Sintenis 20 March 1888 |
Died | 22 April 1965 | (aged 77)
Nationality | German |
Known for | Sculpture, medalist, graphic artist |
Movement | Expressionism |
Olympic medal record | ||
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Art competitions | ||
1928 Amsterdam | Sculpture |
Renée Sintenis, née Renate Alice Sintenis (March 20, 1888, Glatz – April 22, 1965, West Berlin), was a German sculptor, medalist and graphic artist who worked in Berlin. She created mainly small-sized animal sculptures, female nudes, portraits (drawings and sculptures) and sports statuettes.
She was born in Glatz and died in West Berlin. In 1917, she married the painter and writer Emil Rudolf Weiß.[1] In 1928 she won a bronze medal in the art competitions of the Olympic Games for her "Footballeur".[2]
Life and work[]
Renate Alice was the first of three children of Elisabeth Margarethe Sintenis, née Friedländer, and Franz Bernhard Sintenis, a lawyer. Her family name is of Huguenot origin (Sintenis is derived from Saint-Denis). She grew up in Neuruppin, where she lived until 1905. The daily proximity to nature influenced her later artistic work.
She spent her childhood and youth in Neuruppin, where her family had moved in 1888. After a short stay in Stuttgart, the family moved to Berlin in 1905, where her father had received a job at the higher court.
Renate Sintenis took drawing lessons while she was still at school, which was followed by studies in decorative sculpture at the teaching institution of the Museum of Applied Arts in Berlin, with Wilhelm Haverkamp and Leo von König in 1907. In the fifth semester, she dropped out of studies to work as his father's secretary on his instructions. She finally evaded the unwanted activity by breaking with her family, which caused her severe problems, like depression, for a long time.
When Renée Sintenis (as she called herself from then on) met the sculptor Georg Kolbe in 1910, she became his model. She modelled for a now lost life-sized statue.
Inspired by this activity, she began creating in sculpture female nudes, expressive heads like those of André Gide and Joachim Ringelnatz, athletes like the Finnish runner Paavo Nurmi, and self-portraits in drawings, sculptures (in terracotta) and etchings.
After 1915, the concise animal figures emerged, which became the subject of her artistic life. Since she rejected monumentality in sculpture, she mainly created small-format sculptures. These small works of art such as horses, deers, donkeys and dogs, enjoyed great popularity with the public because they were cheaper, suitable as gifts and could be placed in small rooms.
From attending Kolbe's studio, a long-term friendship developed, which he accompanied artistically. In the 1913 Berlin autumn exhibition, the first major exhibition of the Free Secession, Renée Sintenis took part (as in the following years) with small-format plaster sculptures. From 1913 on, she had her works cast in the Hermann Noack fine art foundry, which she attended artistically for decades.
In 1917 she married the type artist, book designer, painter and illustrator Emil Rudolf Weiß, whom she had met years earlier as her teacher and then as a fatherly friend. He supported her and introduced her to numerous other artists. Their collaboration was limited to a few joint projects, of which the edition of the 22 Songs of the poems by Sappho, for which she created the etchings and Weiß made the font designs, achieved particular fame.
Since 1913 she exhibited her sculptures regularly and was highly valued by her colleagues from the Free Secession, the most important Berlin artists' association, among others, by Max Liebermann, Max Beckmann, and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff. The opening of a gallery in Berlin in 1922 made her the most important protagonist of the well-known Flechtheim art circle in those years. The art-interested public was infatuated with her athletic figures, portraits of friends and the small-format self-portraits.
During the Weimar Republic, Renée Sintenis became an internationally recognized artist, with exhibitions in the Berlin Nationalgalerie, in Berlin, in Paris, the Tate Gallery, in London, the Museum of Modern Art, in New York, Glasgow and Rotterdam. Her small-sized depictions of athletes (boxers, footballers, runners) and portrait busts of their circle of friends were found in public and private collections around the world.
In 1928 Sintenis won the bronze medal in the sculpture section of the art competition for the Summer Olympics in Amsterdam; she is thought to be the first LGBTQ+ Olympic medallist.[3][4] Renée Sintenis took part in the 1929 exhibition of the German Association of Artists in the Cologne State House, with five small-format animal sculptures. In 1930 she met the French sculptor Aristide Maillol in Berlin. In 1931 she was appointed as the first sculptor, and second woman after Käthe Kollwitz, together with 13 other artists, to join the Berlin Academy of the Arts – Fine Arts section, although the National Socialists forced her to leave in 1934.
Due to her body size, slim figure, charisma, her self-confident, fashionable demeanor and androgynous beauty, she was often portrayed by artists like her husband, Emil Rudolf Weiß and Georg Kolbe, and by photographers, like Hugo Erfurth, and Frieda Riess. She embodied perfectly the type of the 'new woman' of the 1920s, even if she appeared rather reserved.
Emil Rudolf Weiß was dismissed from his university post on April 1, 1933, because of an angry statement against the Nazi regime and the law to reintroduce the civil service. Sintenis herself was excluded from the Academy of the Arts in 1934 because of her Jewish origins – her maternal grandmother was Jewish before her conversion. Nevertheless, she was able to stay in the Reich Chamber of Culture, even if her works were removed from public collections by the National Socialists.
During the Third Reich, Renée Sintenis and her husband Emil Rudolf Weiß lived with considerable restrictions. She continued to exhibit, although one of her self-portraits was shown in the Degenerate Art exhibition in Munich in 1934. Since she was not banned from exhibiting, she was represented in Düsseldorf by the art dealer Alex Vömel, Flechtheim's successor. In contrast to the 1920s, she was not doing well financially, which was reinforced by the bronze casting ban of 1941.
Until the forced dissolution of the Deutscher Künstlerbund in 1936, Sintenis remained a member of the German Association of Artists. That she was sponsored by the NSDAP propagandist Hans Hinkel, as it was later claimed, has not been proven and is highly unlikely.
Her husband died unexpectedly on November 7, 1942 in Meersburg on the Lake Constance. His death plunged Sintenis into a deep crisis. As a result, she took over his studio in the Künstlerhaus on Kurfürstenstrasse, where Max Pechstein also worked. His family took temporarily on her when her studio house was destroyed by arson and several Allied bombings in 1945. Renée Sintenis lost almost all of her possessions; all papers and parts of her work were lost. While most of the cast models were preserved, the plaster frames of most of the portrait heads were also destroyed. In a self-portrait mask from 1944, the hardships of the war years are visible in her features.
After the war, Renée Sintenis and her partner Magdalena Goldmann moved into an apartment on Innsbrucker Strasse in 1945, where they both lived until their deaths. In 1948, Sintenis received the art prize of the city of Berlin and was appointed by Karl Hofer to the Berlin University of Fine Arts. She was appointed full professor in 1955, although she gave up teaching the same year. She was also appointed to the newly founded Academy of the Arts of Berlin (West) in 1955.
In the 1950s, she became very successful once again. She stayed true to her artistic focus and motifs, which she called "making animals". In 1957, Sintenis' statue of the Berlin Bear was erected as a life-size bronze sculpture on the median of what is now the Bundesautobahn 115 between Dreilinden and the Zehlendorf motorway junction. The then-Governing Mayor of Berlin, Willy Brandt, inaugurated another copy on the Berliner Allee in Düsseldorf on September 23, 1960. On June 6, 1962, a bronze monument of the Berlin bear was erected in the median of the Bundesautobahn 9 at the level of today's junction Munich-Fröttmaning-Süd. A small sculpture of this work is awarded annually as a Silver Bear or Golden Bear to the winners of the Berlin International Film Festival.
On her 70th birthday in 1958, the Haus am Waldsee in Berlin dedicated her a retrospective of her work.
Sintenis died on April 22, 1965. Her grave is in the Waldfriedhof in Berlin-Dahlem, where she is accompanied by Goldmann, who outlived her by 20 years and was her sole heir.[5] The grave site is one of the honor graves of the State of Berlin.
In 2018, her work was included in the exhibition Lesbian Visions, curated by Birgit Bosold and Carina Klugbauer, at the Schwules Museum in Berlin.[6]
Honors[]
She was presented with prestigious awards, such as the "Knight of the Peace Class" of the order Pour le Mérite, in 1952, and the Great Federal Order of Merit in 1953.
Public Collections[]
- Art Institute of Chicago[7]
- The Museum of Modern Art, New York[8]
- National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.[9]
- Los Angeles County Museum of Art[10]
Selected sculptures[]
Grazing Foal
The Berlin Bear
References[]
- ^ "Renée Sintenis | artnet". www.artnet.com. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ "Renée Sintenis". Olympedia. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
- ^ "The History of LGBTQ Women in the Olympics". Autostraddle. 3 August 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
- ^ "Study shows the Olympics is most LGBTQIA+ friendly sporting event ever". Indy100. 4 August 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
- ^ "Renée Sintensis: Erfolgsbildhauerin und Garçonne der Berliner Bohème". Queer.de (in German). 30 December 2013. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
doch liegt auf dem Waldfriedhof in Berlin-Dahlem neben ihr nicht ihr Mann, sondern die Frau, die ihre letzten Lebensjahre begleitete: ihre "Haushälterin" und Alleinerbin Magdalena Goldmann, die Renée Sintenis um rund zwanzig Jahre überlebte.
["but it is not her husband is lying next to her in the Waldfriedhof in Berlin-Dahlem, but the woman who was her companion in her final years: her "housekeeper" and sole heir Magdalena Goldmann, who survived Renée Sintenis by around twenty years."] - ^ "Exhibition Opening Lesbian Visions – Artistic positions from Berlin". Schwules Museum. 30 April 2018. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
- ^ "Discover Art & Artists". The Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ "Renée Sintenis | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ "Artist Info". www.nga.gov. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ "Standing Baby Bear (Stehender kleiner Bär) | LACMA Collections". collections.lacma.org. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
External links[]
Media related to Renée Sintenis at Wikimedia Commons
- Profile @ databaseolympics.com
- 1888 births
- 1965 deaths
- 20th-century German women artists
- German women sculptors
- People from Kłodzko
- People from the Province of Silesia
- Olympic bronze medalists in art competitions
- Commanders Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
- Recipients of the Pour le Mérite (civil class)
- Medalists at the 1928 Summer Olympics
- Olympic competitors in art competitions
- LGBT artists from Germany